Studio 04 - Unliveable Berlin Process Portfolio

Page 1

S T U D I O 0 4

U N L I V A B L E C I T Y B E R L I N

1


S T U D I O 0 4

EDITED AND AUTHORED BY TOMMY HENG

D E S I G N P R O C E S S P O R T F O L I O

U N L I V E A B L E C I T Y B E R L I N SUPERVISED BY MICHAEL ROPER AND CATHERINE DUGGAN

11

2015

STUDIO 04 MELBOURNE SCHOOL OF DESIGN U N I V E R S I T Y O F M E L B O U R N E , PA R K V I L L E STUDENT ID - 516673 2


3


TA B L E O F C O N T E N T S

C H A P T E R S P A G E

I N T R O D U C T I O N 5 WEEK 1 - S T U D I O T H E O R Y 7 - 1 9 WEEK 2 - B E R L I N H I S T O R Y 2 0 - 3 5 WEEK 3 - K U L T U R F O R U M 3 7 - 4 7 WEEK 4 - B E R L I N I N F I L M 4 8 - 6 3 WEEK 5 - C U L T U R E M A P 6 5 - 7 7

WEEK6 - M I D S E M E S T E R I N T E R I M 7 8 - 9 5

W E E K 7 - 8

B E R L I N ( A N C B ) _ M I D W E E K P R E S E N T A T I O N S 9 6 - 1 0 5 WEEK 9 - 10 B E R L I N ( A N C B ) _ F I N A L C R I T 1 0 6 - 1 2 3

WEEK 11 - 14

M E L B O U R N E F I N A L P R E S E N T A T I O N 1 2 5 - 1 5 2

4


INTRODUCTION

Unliveable Berlin is a University of Melbourne design studio, organised and run by Melbourne based architects, Michael Roper (Director, Architecture Architecture) & Catherine Duggan (Senior Associate, Peter Elliott Architects).This studio proposes taking a group of architecture, landscape and urban design students to the ANCB Metropolitan Laboratory in Berlin where they will investigate and respond to a range of architectural and urbanconditions. The city of Berlin has undergone several periods of significant trauma and transformation. Growing out of two world wars, living through three decades of east west division followed by reunification, rebuilding and more recent bankruptcy,Berlin is riddled with the scars of its history:abandoned trenches, unfinished infrastructure, bullet ridden buildings, unrealised grandeur. Politically it is caught between socialism and capitalism. Physically, between the destruction of war and urban regrowth. Culturally, between division and unity. This is a city still coming to terms with its physical and cultural territories yet revelling in the uncertainty of its future. More than most, Berlin has a pronounced history of social exclusion and ideological seclusion. In this context we ask, how does a city express its hostilities and how, as architects, can we foster cities of inclusion?

Over three consecutive years, Unliveable Berlin will explore three distinct historical periods: 1920’s pre Nazi Berlin,1970’s divided Berlin,and 2020’s liberated Berlin. With the German capital as our ever willing laboratory rat, students will be asked consider what it means to accommodate the excluded, and to redress cultural hostilities through architecture and urban thinking.The travelling studio encourages students to explore urban opportunities with fresh eyes. Stripped of well worn reference points, the foreign cityis laid bare.They come to sense the city’s unconscious – its undercurrents – developing instincts for the manifold cultural forces that drive a place. Through the travelling studio, we aim to foster broad, global thinking problem solvers. At the conclusion of the semester, we expect our students to be versed and agile in the physical mechanisms (infrastructural, geographical) and cultural forces (political and social) that underpin urban existence, training them to look both to their subjective experience as well as outside themselves, to challenge the urban systems within which they operate.

5


6


WEEK 1 STUDIO THEORY

7


W E E K 1

STUDIO THEORY

RESEARCHED TEXT :

SPACES OF UNCERTAINTY

AUTHOR: KENNY CUPERS PUBLISHED: JANUARY 2002

RESEARCH AND DESIGN NOTES - TA B U L A R A S A

=

B L A N K S L AT E

- B e r l i n h a s a s e l e c t i v e h i s t o r y

A d e s i r e t o r e m e m b e r, a d e s i r e t o f o r g e t . . .

- A r c h i t e c t u r e t a k e s p a s s i o n o f t h e v o i d s i n B e r l i n . N E G AT I V E S PA C E . - B E R L I N I S A C I T Y I N F L AT E D W I T H H I S T O R Y B U T A B S E N T W I T H T R A D I T I O N . - UNCONTROLLED BURSTS OF DEVELOPMENT IN FOCUS AREAS. - S Y M B O L I S M O F R E B U I L D I N G T H E C I T Y O V E R T H E E X I S T I N G C I T Y. - A U R B A N D I A L E C T I C I S T H E A R T O F I N V E S T I G AT I N G O R D I S C U S S I N G T H E T R U T H O F O P I O N I O N S . - TRUMMERAUFSCHUTTUNGEN

=

Artificial mountains of accumulated rubble from WWII

- A R C H I T E C T U R E O F F O U N D AT I O N A N D R E F O U N D AT I O N - A CITY OF TEMPORARY ARCHITECTURES

-

easily swayed, responds to mainstream influences and trends.

- Understanding the city becomes better during the night. W ithout having to see the built form, the heterogenous experiences starts to make more sense at night. - THE VOID is something that is never possessed but always available. It longs for colonization

8


9


W E E K 1

STUDIO THEORY

10


W E E K 1

STUDIO THEORY

11


W E E K 1

STUDIO THEORY

SPACE PLACE VOID I

12


W E E K 1

STUDIO THEORY

SPACE PLACE VOID I

13


WEEK 1

I

STUDIO THEORY

PRE WAR

WW II

POST WAR

POST BERLIN WALL

CONTEMPORARY BERLIN

HEGEMONIC TENDENCIES I - PLACE | SPACE | VOID 14


WEEK 1

I

STUDIO THEORY

BERLIN HISTORY THROUGH LINES 1. PRE WAR

DURING THE TIMES LEADING UP TO THE WAR, GERMANY (BERLIN) WAS IN AN UNSETTLING STATE OF AFFAIRS IN BOTH ITS ECONOMY AND SOCIAL IDENTITY. HOWEVER, DURING HITLER’S REGIME IN THE THIRD REICH, GERMANY PROSPERED AND RAPIDLY GREW. THIS PORTION OF THE DIAGRAM SHOWCASES THAT PERIOD OF STABILITY. THE LINEARITY AND REGULARITY OF THE LINES REPRESENT ORDER, UNIFICATION, DISCIPLINE AND GROWTH. 2. WW II AFTER THE WAR WHICH Occurred BETWEEN 1939 AND 1945, 75% OF BERLIN WAS LEVELED AND THE CITY WAS LEFT IN A STATE OF UTTER DISMAY AND DESPAIR. THE ABSENCE OF LINES IN THIS PORTION OF THE DIAGRAM SYMBOLISES THAT BREAK AND GAP WHERE ALL ADVANCEMENTS AND PROGRESS IN SOCIETY CEASED TO EXIST. 3. POST WAR IN AN ATTEMPT TO REBUILD BERLIN AND RESTORE ITS PRESENCE, THE ALLIES DIVIDED THE CITY INTO THE EAST AND THE WEST (GDR AND DDR). OCCUPIED AND OPERATED UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF THE AMERICANS, BRITISH, FRENCH AND SOVIETS, THE CITY HAD FOUR PRECINCTS. EVIDENCE OF THIS IS STILL OBSERVABLE TODAY THROUGH THE TYPE OF ARCHITECTURE AND VARIOUS COMMUNITIES THAT OCCUPY AREA OF BERLIN. THE LINES IN THIS PORTION OF THE DIAGRAM REFLECT THE FOUR QUADRANTS AND THEIR GROWTH; THE SPROUTING OF VARIOUS CULTURES AND COMMUNITIES. 4. POST BERLIN WALL THE BERLIN WALL WAS TAKEN DOWN IN 1989 AND THIS WAS THE FIRST TIME THAT EAST AND WEST CULTURES WERE GIVEN THE OPPORTUNITY TO COEXIST AND MERGE TOGETHER. THE LINES IN THIS PORTION ILLUSTRATE THE CONVERGENCE AND AT THE SAME TIME THE STRUGGLES OF COEXISTING TOGETHER. 5. CONTEMPORARY BERLIN BERLIN TODAY IS A MELTING POT OF CULTURES AND THE ARTS. BECAUSE OF ITS UNIQUE AND RICH HISTORY, THE CITY THRIVES ON THE LOCALITY OF A NUMBER OF DISTRICTS AND PRECINCTS. THESE AREAS HAVE DEVELOPED AND BECOME CENTRES OF ACTIVITY FOR THE CITY IN WHICH WE IDENTIFY BERLIN WITH. THE LINES HERE ILLUSTRATE THE GROWTH OF THESE COMMUNITIES. THOUGH SOMEWHAT DISTINCT, BERLIN IS UNDERGOING A PROCESS OF UNIFICATION.

15


WEEK 1

I

STUDIO THEORY

A CULTURAL SPACE OF HISTORY TAKING INSPIRATION FROM THE VECTOR DIAGRAM, A 3D MODEL FOR A CULTURAL SPACE WAS DEVELOPED TO REPRESENT THE IDEA OF HISTORY THROUGH A PHYSICAL EXPERIENCE OF ARCHITECTURE. THE BUILDING CONSISTS OF FOUR SECTIONS OR FLOORS WHICH IDENTIFY WITH ONE ASPECT OF GERMANY/BERLIN’S HISTORY BETWEEN 1900 - TODAY.

PREWAR BERLIN

WORLD WAR II | POST WAR BERLIN

TRANSITION

MODERNISM | PRESENT

16


WEEK 1

I

STUDIO THEORY

1. PREWAR BERLIN

ELEVATION

2. WORLD WAR II

3. POST WAR BERLIN

BUILDING PERSPECTIVE

4. TRANSITIONAL

5. MODERNISM

6. PRESENT

OBJECT PERSPECTIVE

17


WEEK 1

I

STUDIO THEORY

LEVEL 1 PRE WAR

LEVEL 2 WW II

LEVEL 3 POST WAR

LEVEL 4 TRANSITIONAL

LEVEL 5 MODERNIST

LEVEL 6 PRESENT DAY

18


19


THE THIRD REICH 1933 - 1945

20


WEEK 2 BERLIN HISTORY

21


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

THE THIRD REICH 1933-1945 - FASCIST TOTALITARIAN STATE - ETHNIC CLEANSING

- DICTATORSHIP - RACIAL BIOLOGY

- PROPAGANDA - RACISM

HITLER BLAMES THE SOCIALIST PARTY AND MAKES USE OF A LOOPHOLE IN THE LEGAL SYSTEM TO OBTAIN POWER.

HITLER BUILDS THE GERMAN ARMY THROUGH CONSCRIPTION LAWS

THE FIRST CONCENTRATION CAMP IS OPENED.

1934

GREAT DEPRESSION CAUSED GERMANY TO STRUGGLE WITH MORE THAN 4 MILLION PEOPLE UNEMPLOYED

1935

THE NSDAP PASSES THE NUREMBERG LAWS. THESE LAWS WERE ANTISEMITIC AND LEGALISED THE DISCRIMINATION OF THE JEWISH PEOPLE.

1936

HITLER COMMITS SUICIDE ON APRIL 30 1945. GERMAN MILITARY FORCES PROGRESSIVELY SURRENDER DURING MAY 1945

FROM 1939 - 41 GERMANY INVADED CZECHOSLOVAKIA, POLAND, DENMARK, NORWAY, FRANCE, BELGIUM, USSR, YUGOSLAVIA AND BOMBED VARIOUS PARTS OF ENGLAND.

BERLIN HOSTS THE OLYMPIC GAMES IN 1936

HITLER BECOMES CHANCELLOR OF GERMANY IN 1933.

1933

- NOTION OF THE SUPREME RACE (ARYAN RACE)

1937

1938

9TH OF NOV 1938 - CRYSTAL NIGHT OCCURED WHERE A VIOLENT ATTACK ON THE JEWISH COMMUNITY TAKES PLACE. OVER 400 SYNAGOGUES WERE BURNT DOWN AND 7500 JEWISH SHOPS WERE DESTROYED.

1940

1945

ITHE AUSCHWITZ CONCENTRATION CAMPS OPENS IN MAY 1940

IN 1939 BRITAIN AND FRANCE DECLARE WAR ON GERMANY

HITLER DESPERATELY CONSCRIPTS ALL MEN BETWEEN THE AGES OF 16-60 FOR SERVICE IN THE GERMAN MILITARY IN SEPTEMBER 1945.

22


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

ALBERT SPEER 1905-1981

23


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

THE NATURE OF INCLUSION AND EXCLUSION 1. ONE FEELS INCLUDED OR EXCLUDED BASED ON THEIR STATE OF MIND. - IT IS THEIR OWN MENTAL PROJECTION OF THEIR INNER WELLBEING ON THE EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT.

2. RELATES TO A SENSE OF BELONGING - INCLUSION AND EXLUSION RELIES ON SHARED COMMON INTEREST.

3. SCALE - MANY SCALES OF INCLUSION AND INCLUSION. MEANING OF THE IDEA IS LOST AS SCALE INCREASES TOWARDS AN INFINITE VALUE.

4. THE CONCEPT IS RELATIVE

- IT IS SIMPLY A MATTER OF PERSPECTIVE. THE SUBJECT AND THE INDIVIDUAL REGARD FOR AUTONOMY GENERATES THE DISTINCTION IN WHETHER ONE FEELS INCLUDED OR EXCLUDED.

SELF

INTERROGATION OF IDENTITY THE IMAGE ON THE ADJACENT PAGE IS PART OF A MEANS TO VISUALISE THE CONDITION OF IDENTITY. THE PREMISE IS THAT IDENTITY MANIFESTS ITSELF FROM TWO ENVIRONMENTS, THAT IS THE EXTERNAL REALM OF FORMS AND THE INDIVIDUALS INNER STATE OF MIND. THE EXTERNAL REALM OF FORMS IS SOMETHING THAT THE INDIVIDUAL/WE HAVE NO CONTROL OVER. THE INNER CIRCLE HOWEVER IS DETERMINED BY HOW STRONGLY WE IDENTIFY OURSELVES IN CHARACTER OR QUALITIES. THE RELATIONSHIP ESTABLISHED BETWEEN THESE TWO SPHERES IS WHAT CREATES THESE IDENTITIES. THE MORE WE IDENTIFY OURSELVES WITH THE EXTERNAL EVNIRONMENT, THE MORE CONVOLUTED THE MATRIX BECOMES. IF WE REALISE THERE IS NO NEED TO IDENTIFY AND COME THE THE REVELATION THAT THERE IS NO IDENTITY, THE MATRIX BECOMES A VOID OF NOTHINGNESS.

24


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

25


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

ITERATION 1.1

ITERATION 1.2

ITERATION 1.3

EXTERNAL: 50 INTERNAL: 12

EXTERNAL: 10 INTERNAL: 12

EXTERNAL: 20 INTERNAL: 12

ITERATION 2.1

ITERATION 2.2

ITERATION 2.3

EXTERNAL: 50 INTERNAL: 12

EXTERNAL: 10 INTERNAL: 12

EXTERNAL: 20 INTERNAL: 12

TOTAL INCLUSIVENESS

ITERATION 3.2

ITERATION 3.3

EXTERNAL: 10 INTERNAL: 0

EXTERNAL: 10 INTERNAL: 2

EXTERNAL: 20 INTERNAL: 2

26


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

ITERATION 1.4

ITERATION 1.5

ITERATION 1.6

EXTERNAL: 30 INTERNAL: 12

EXTERNAL: 40 INTERNAL: 12

EXTERNAL: 50 INTERNAL: 12

ITERATION 2.4

ITERATION 2.5

ITERATION 2.6

EXTERNAL: 30 INTERNAL: 12

EXTERNAL: 40 INTERNAL: 12

EXTERNAL: 50 INTERNAL: 12

ITERATION 3.4

ITERATION 3.5

ITERATION 3.6

EXTERNAL: 30 INTERNAL: 2

EXTERNAL: 40 INTERNAL: 2

EXTERNAL: 50 INTERNAL: 2

27


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

SCALE AT 1

SCALE AT 100

SCALE AT 1000

SCALE AT 10000

SCALE AT 1000000

28


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

DESIGN JOURNAL

29


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

DESIGN JOURNAL

30


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

DESIGN JOURNAL

31


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

VARIOUS CONFIGURATIONS OF SEATS, BENCHES AND TABLES CAN BE ARRANGED TO PROVIDE FLEXIBILITY IN THE ARRANGEMENT.

PUBLIC SEATING AND PUBLIC STAGE

SQUATTING CABINS CAN BE SET UP BY THE HOMELESS TO STAY. THESE NODES CAN BE A SOURCE OF ACTIVITY FOR REFUGEES AND SQUATTERS IN THE CITY.

SQUATTING CABIN

NODES CAN BE TRANSFORMED INTO VERTIAL GREEN WALLS AND GARDENS FOR THE COMMUNITY TO PLANT THEIR OWN PLANTS AND FOOD.

CAFES CAN BE SET UP AT ANY SPCIFIC NODE. CAFE OWNERS CAN PATENT THEIR OWN PLAN AND CONFIGURATION SO THAT THEY CAN SHIFT BETWEEN NODES Across THE CITY.

COMMUNITY GARDEN

SMALL COMMUNITY LIBRARIES WHERE BOOKS ARE DONATED OR EXCHANGED CAN BE ESTABLISHED. THE STRUCTURE CAN BE MODIFIED SO THAT IT BECOMES WEATHERPROOF TO SHELTER AND PROTECT THE BOOKS FROM RAIN.

COMMUNITY LIBRARY

POP-UP CAFE

LARGER PROGRAMS SUCH AS MARKETS CAN BE SET UP. ADDITIONAL ELEMENTS MAY BE REQUESTIED BY THE COUNCIL FOR EVENTS SUCH AS THESE SO THAT LARGER STRUCTURES CAN BE ERECTED.

COMMUNITY MARKET

32


WEEK 2

I

BERLIN HISTORY

“... Enlightenment Architecture is consistent with the new ideological role it had assumed. In order to become part of the structure of the bourgeois city, architecture had to REDIMENSION itself, dissolving into the uniformity ensured by preconstituted formal systems” - Manfredo Tafuri

“Order must reign but in a kind of confusion...’and from a multitude of regular parts the whole must give a certain idea of irregularity and chaos, which is so fitting to great cities” - Milizia

33


ITERATION 1.1

EXTERNAL: 50 INTERNAL: 20

EXTERNAL: 50 INTERNAL: 12

ITERATION 2

ITERATION 3

EXTERNAL: 50 INTERNAL: 2

ARCHITECTURE OF SCALE Through my investigations and exploration of inclusion/exclusion, I deduced that “scale” was the only means in which I could converse about identity through a means of formal expression.

THE BIG VOID

ITERATION 3

VISTA OF LIGHT EXTERNAL: 40 INTERNAL: 20

EXTERNAL: 40 INTERNAL: 12

SCALE at 1000000

As we decrease the resolution of focus, the notion of being excluded ceases to exist.

16000

ITERATION 1.2

ITERATION 2

SCALE at 10000

EXTERNAL: 40 INTERNAL: 2

OBSERVATORY PLATFORM ITERATION 1.3

ITERATION 2

ITERATION 3

LIFT UP

EXTERNAL: 30 INTERNAL: 12

ITERATION 1.4

ITERATION 2

EXTERNAL: 20 INTERNAL: 20

EXTERNAL: 20 INTERNAL: 12

ITERATION 1.5

ITERATION 2.5

EXTERNAL: 30 INTERNAL: 2

ITERATION 3

EXTERNAL: 20 INTERNAL: 2

Only one person at any given time is to go up onto the patform. Once up there, the person diminishes and becomes the “subject”. They feel empowered with height and vistas of the city but yet succumb to nervousness as they become the centre of attention.

SCALE at 1000

75000

EXTERNAL: 30 INTERNAL: 20

TOWER OF SCALE The tower of scale is a space which interrogates how scale and its perception of it is received its visitors.

SCALE at 100

ITERATION 3.5

LIFT DOWN

EXTERNAL: 10 INTERNAL: 20

EXTERNAL: 10 INTERNAL: 12

ITERATION 1.6

ITERATION 2.6

From above, the crowd becomes the mob, however, as one of the many down below, one loses their identity amidst the mass of bodies. This dialogue between the sovereign and the subject becomes indistinguishable thus commenting that scale is simply a matter of perspective and becomes irrelevant as the scale approaches infinity.

EXTERNAL: 10 INTERNAL: 2

ENTRANCE TOTAL INCLUSIVENESS

SCALE at 1 LOBBY/GROUND FLOOR

EXTERNAL: 0 INTERNAL: 20

EXTERNAL: 50 INTERNAL: 12

EXTERNAL: 0 INTERNAL: 0

DIAGRAM - SOCIAL EXPERIMENT WITH SCALE

34


NODE OF OPPORTUNITY. DEVELOPMENT. EXHANGE NODE

PLANTER BOXES

COUNTER TOP STORAGE AND BAR TABLE

THE NODE WAS IMAGINED AND DESIGNED FROM THE NEED TO PROVIDE USERS WITH ACCESS TO BASIC AMENITIES, SERVICES AND INFRASTRUCTURE. THE NODE IS REFERRED TO AS AN URBAN TOOLKIT TO BE USED TO FOSTER BETTER COMMUNAL ACTIVITIES AND INTERACTIONS AS WELL AS ACTIVATE SPACES AND VOIDS WITHIN AN URBAN ENVIRONMENT. THE NODE ALSO SERVES A FRAMEWORK FOR BUSINESSES, IDEAS AND EVENTS WHICH MAY BE TRANSLATED ACROSS THE CITY WHERE OTHER NODES ARE LOCATED, THUS ACTING AS A DIGITAL ANCHOR IN THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT. WE OFTEN THINK TOO BIG AND TRY TO REALISE CHANGE IN THE GRANDEST OF SCALES. PERHAPS IT IS TIME TO INCREASE THE SCALE OF RESOLUTION AND LOOK AT SPACES AND HOW THE SMALLEST URBAN INTERVENTION MIGHT SPARK A BIG CHANGE.

CASCADING PLANTER BOXES

LOWER COUNTER

COMMUNITY GARDEN

m

0m

SERVES AS A STREET LIGHT AND POINT OF REFERENCE FOR PEDESTRIANS,

POP-UP CAFE

LOWER COUNTER

30

300mm

NODE

NODE MODULE THE STANDARD NODE MODULE IS A 300x300 CUBE. THE DIMENSIONS CAN BE MODIFIED ACCORDING TO THE USERS NEEDS. THESE WILL HAVE TO BE ORDERED. EACH SIDE CAN BE CUSTOMISED WITH PANELS FROM A WIDE RANGE OF MATERIALS AND DESIGNS.

VARYING LENGTHS OF ELEMENTS CAN BE REQUESTED FROM NODE. THESE MAY HAVE TO BE BOUGHT BY THE USER.

SERVES AS A WIFI HOTSPOT WHICH INVITES PASSERBYS AND OTHER USERS TO ENGAGE WITH THE NODE.

NODE

NODE

POTENTIAL FOR LIGHTS TO BE INSTALLED

PLATFORM BENCHES

CONTAINS POWER SOCKETS THAT MAY BE USED FOR STORES, BARS ETC. CAN ALSO BE RENTED TO CHARGE MOBILE PHONE DEVICES.

SEATING BENCH

THE NODE AND THE SERVICES/ INFRASTRUCTURE IT PROVIDES IS RENTED. A PANEL ALLOWS THE USER TO USE THE VARIOUS SERVICES AT A MINIMAL COST.

STANDARD SEATS BOOK SHELVES

NODE CONNECTORS SIMPLE DESIGN WHICH USERS ARE TO TWIST AND LOCK THE ELEMENTS TO ONE ANOTHER.

TABLES

PUBLIC SEATING - PERFORMANCE

COMMUNITY LIBRARY

NODE RIG FOR LIGHTING

RAIL SYSTEM FOR WATERPROOFING COVER TO BE INSTALLED

NODE

SHELVES

CONNECTORS AND NODE ELEMENTS ARE STORED AT THE BASE OF THE NODE AND CAN BE RETRIEVED ONCE THE SERVICE IS RENTED. ADDITIONAL ELEMENTS OR SPECIALISED EXTENSIONS CAN BE ORDERED AND DELIVERED FOR USE.

STORAGE SPACE

STORE STANDS

SLEEPING CABIN

SQUATTING CABINS

COMMUNITY MARKET

35


36


WEEK 3 K U LT U R F O R U M

37


WEEK 3

I K U L T U R F O R U M

KULTURFORUM RESEARCH

38


WEEK 3

I K U L T U R F O R U M

BERLIN STATE LIBRARY

I

HANS SCHAROUN

39


WEEK 3

I K U L T U R F O R U M

DESIGN JOURNAL

40


WEEK 3

I K U L T U R F O R U M

CONDITION 1

IN LIGHT OF INCLUSION/EXCLUSION CONDITION 10

THE DIAGRAM MAPS OUT THE ANALYSIS OF LIGHT AND ITS ABILITY TO CONJURE EXPERIENCES OF INCLUSIVENESS AND EXCLUSIVENESS. THE CONDITIONS WERE SET AS SUCH THAT TWO MOMENTS ARE REQUIRED TO DETERMINE WHETHER THE VIEWER OR THE VIEWED IS IN A STATE OF BEING INCLUDED OR EXCLUDED. THE CONDITIONS ARE ALSO CATEGORISED INTO 3 AREAS:

CONDITION 2

1. THE PERCEIVERS PERCEPTION OF WHETHER THEY ARE INCLUDED OR EXCLUDED. 2. THE PHYSICAL DIFFERENCE OR SIMILAR CONDITION IN WHICH TWO SPACES ARE IN LIGHT OR DARKNESS. 3. THE SIMPLE STATE IN WHICH A SPACE IS LIT OR IN DARKNESS.

CONDITION 9

THE DIAGRAM MAPS THE 10 CONDITIONS IN WHICH THE COLOURS EXPLAIN THE LEVEL OF INCLUSIVENESS OR EXCLUSIVENESS OF THAT PARTICULAR EXPERIENCE.

CONDITION 3

CONDITION 8 CONDITION 4

CONDITION 7 CONDITION 5

CONDITION 6

VISIBLE

“INVISIBLE”

LIGHT

DARK

MENTAL

RELATIONSHIP

LIGHT/DARK

41


WEEK 3

I K U L T U R F O R U M

PLAN - TUNNELS AND CHAMBERS

SITE PLAN - KULTURFORUM

42


WEEK 3

I K U L T U R F O R U M

AN INTERVENTION OF LIGHT THE ARCHITECTURAL PROPOSITION HERE IS A STRUCTURE THAT CONTAINS A CHAMBER AND A SERIES OF CORRIDORS WHICH HAVE BEEN DESIGNED TO TEST THE TEN CONDITIONS OF LIGHT THAT WAS PREVIOUSLY EXLPLORED. THE MAIN CHAMBER WHICH IS LOCATED UNDERGROUND IS ACCESSED VIA A SERIES OF TUNNELS. THE TUNNELS CROSS THE SITE AND ARE MEANT TO DISORIENTATE THE VISITOR SO THAT WHEN THEY ENTER THE CHAMBER THEY ARE COMPLETELY UNAWARE OF THEIR LOCALITY IN RELATION TO THE GROUND ABOVE. THE CHAMBER IS VERY DARK AND ONLY HAS RAYS OF LIGHT WHICH PENETRATE FROM THE SKYLIGHTS ABOVE. AS PEOPLE BEGIN TO POPULATE THE CHAMBER, SILHOUETTES APPEAR AND DISAPPEAR AS BODIES COME IN AND OUT OF THE LIGHT. THE TWO CORRIDORS ABOVE THE THE CHAMBER EVOKES A SIMILAR EXPERIENCE BUT IS HOWEVER MORE VISUAL AND INTIMATE IN THE SENSE THAT VISITORS CONFRONT EACH OTHER THROUGH A SERIES OF WINDOWS. THESE WINDOWS ARE SET UP IN A WAY THAT THE VISITOR MAY BE IN LIGHT OR DARKNESS.

LONG SECTION

SHORT SECTION

AXONOMETRIC OF CHAMBER

43


WEEK 3

I K U L T U R F O R U M

PERSPECTIVE RENDERS INSPIRED BY PETER ZUMTHORS ATMOSPHERIC RENDERS OF LIGHT, THESE IMAGES DEPICT THE SPATIAL QUALITIES OF A CHAMBER WITH LIGHT ONLY BEING PENETRATED FROM SKYLIGHTS AND DOORWAYS. THIS SPACE EMBODIES THE 10 CONDITIONS THAT WERE HYPOTHESISED IN THE ANALYSIS SEEN ON THE PREVIOUS PAGES.

44


WEEK 3

I K U L T U R F O R U M

SAMPLES OF EXPERIENCES AND CONDITIONS OF LIGHTNESS AND DARKNESS

PERSON VIEWING A DARK SPACE FROM A POSITION OF LIGHT

PERSON VIEWING A DARK SPACE WHILST IN DARKNESS

WHEN A PERSON ENCOUNTERS ANOTHER BODY IN LIGHT

45


ENTRANCES

TRENCH TRENCH STAIRS

STAIR WALLS

PERSPECTIVE

SKYLIGHT SKYLIGHT

MAIN HALL TUNNEL ENTRANCES

EXPLODED PERSPECTIVE

LONG SECTION

MAIN HALL SHORT SECTION

PLAN

SITE PLAN

46


CONDITION 1

INCLUDED - INCLUDED

CONDITION 1 CONDITION 10

INCLUDED - INCLUDED

CONDITION 2

EXCLUDED - EXLUDED

EXCLUDED - INCLUDED

CONDITION 2

EXLUDED - EXCLUDED EXLUDED - INCLUDED

EXCLUDED - EXCLUDED

CONDITION 3

INCLUDED - INCLUDED

CONDITION 9

INCLUDED - INCLUDED

EXCLUDED - EXCLUDED

CONDITION 4

CONDITION 3

EXCLUDED - EXCLUDED INCLUDED - EXCLUDED

EXCLUDED - EXCLUDED

CONDITION 5

EXCLUDED - EXCLUDED INCLUDED - EXCLUDED

INCLUDED - INCLUDED

CONDITION 6

INCLUDED - INCLUDED

CONDITION 8

EXCLUDED - INCLUDED

EXLUDED - EXCLUDED

CONDITION 7

CONDITION 4

INCLUDED - INCLUDED INCLUDED - INCLUDED

EXLUDED - INCLUDED

CONDITION 8

EXCLUDED - EXCLUDED INCLUDED - INCLUDED

INCLUDED - INCLUDED

CONDITION 9 CONDITION 7 CONDITION 5

INCLUDED - INCLUDED INCLUDED - INCLUDED

EXCLUDED - EXCLUDED

CONDITION 10 CONDITION 6

INCLUDED - INCLUDED INCLUDED - INCLUDED

VISIBLE

“INVISIBLE”

LIGHT

DARK

MENTAL

RELATIONSHIP

LIGHT/DARK

47


48


WEEK 4 BERLIN IN FILM

49


WEEK 4

I

BERLIN IN FILM

DESIGN JOURNAL

50


WEEK 4

I

BERLIN IN FILM

51


WEEK 4

I

BERLIN IN FILM

1. THE SCENE IS SET FOR A METROPOLIS IN THE FUTURE.

2. ROTWANG REVEALS HIS LATEST INVENTION TO FREDERSEN (THE CITY’S MASTER).

3. FREDER (FREDERSON’S SON) MEETS MARIA AND IS FASCINATED WITH HER AGENDA TO SAVE AND PROTECT THE CHILDREN OF METROPOLIS.

4. BENEATH THE BUSTLING CITY, A GIANT MACHINE IS OPERATED BY AN ARMY OF SLAVES. THE CITY DEPENDS ON IT.

5. ROTWANG UNLEASHES HIS INVENTION TO SUPRESS THE UPRISING REBELS LED BY FREDER AND MARIA.

6. THE MACHINE IS DESTROYED BY THE SLAVES BUT THEY EVENTUALLY DISCOVER THAT THE METROPOLIS AND WORLD AND LIVE IN COLLAPSES WITHOUT IT.

52


WEEK 4

I

BERLIN IN FILM

DESIGN JOURNAL

53


WEEK 4

I

BERLIN IN FILM

LINE DRAWING OF COGS AND THE MACHINE

54


WEEK 4

I

BERLIN IN FILM

DEPENDECY MAN | MACHINE

- A machine’s function determines its value, novelty and virtue. -

“Between the brain that plans and the hands that build, these must be a mediator. It is the heart that must bring about an understanding between them” - Maria -

DEPENDENCY + IGNORANCE = MACHINE (OF PARTS)

(CONSCIOUSNESS)

DEPENDENCY + WISDOM = MAN (PURPOSE)

(CONSCIOUSNESS) (KNOWLDDGE)

55


WEEK 4

I

BERLIN IN FILM

ARCHITECTURE AS MACHINE DRAWING INSPIRATION FROM FRITZ LANG’S METROPOLIS, THE DESIGN THIS WEEK EXPLORES THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE USER AND THE BUILDING IN THE WAY THAT WE MIGHT OPERATE IT. THE FORM AND PLANNING OF THE GALLERY TAKES FROM MIES’ NEUE NATIONALEGALERIE, HOWEVER, IT HAS THE AESTHETIC OF A MACHINE IN THAT ITS SERVICES ARE MECHANICAL AND REQUIRE THE USER TO OEPRATE THEM. THE DOORS, WALL PANELS AND WINDOWS MAY ALL BE OPERATED BY LEVERS, WHEELS OR PULLEYS. I HAVE CHOSEN TO DEVELOP SUCH A DESIGN TO COMMENT ON THE WAY IN WHICH WE HAVE RELIED TOO MUCH ON TECHNOLOGY TO CONTROL ASPECTS OF OUR LIVES. AS SUCH IT HAS BECOME DETRIMENTAL IN THE WAY THAT WE HAVE REGARDED ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE USER AND THE BUILDING MUST BE ONE THAT ALLOWS US TO UNDERSTAND HOW A BUILDING WORKS AND ALLOW US TO APPRECIATE ARCHITECTURE IN THAT WAY. THIS SENSE OF TRANSPARENCY, I BELIEVE IS DEMOCRATIC AND BECOMES ACCESSIBLE TO THE GREATER COMMUNITY.

56


WEEK 4

I

BERLIN IN FILM

SITE PLAN

57


WEEK 4

I

BERLIN IN FILM

ELEVATION

SECTION DETAIL

SECTION

SECTION DETAIL

ELEVATION

58


WEEK 4

I

BERLIN IN FILM

FLOOR PLAN

EXPLODED AXONOMETRIC

59


PHILHARMONIC

COUNTERWEIGHT STRUCTURAL FRAME

KUNSTGEWERBMUSEUM

COUNTERWEIGHTS INTERIROR PERSPECTIVE

BERLIN STATE LIBRARY

KUNSTBIBLIOTHEK

ROOF

ENTRANCE DOORWAYS

NEW NATIONAL GALLERY

INTERIROR PERSPECTIVE

SITE PLAN

VERTICAL EXTERNAL WALLS STRUCTURAL COLUMNS

GROUND FLOOR OPERABLE SLIDING WALLS

OPENED WALLS

LONG SECTION

CLOSED WALLS

SHORT SECTION

EAST ELEVATION

60


61


INTERIOR PERSPECTIVE

62


INTERIOR PERSPECTIVE

63


64


WEEK 5 C U LT U R E M A P

65


WEEK 5

I

C U LT U R E M A P

EAST SIDE GALLERY THE EAST SIDE GALLERY IS A 1.3KM STRETCH OF THE REMAINS OF THE BERLIN WALL AND IS NOW COMMEMORATED AS A MEMORIAL OF FREEDOM. THE WALL CONSISTS OF OVER 105 PAINTINGS AND ART PIECES FROM BOTH LOCAL AND INTERNATIONAL ARTISTS. TODAY, IT IS CONSIDERED TO BE THE LARGEST AND LONGEST-LASTING OPEN AIR GALLERY IN THE WORLD WHICH DOCUMENTS AND EXPRESSES EUPHORIA AND FREEDOM. SINCE 1989, A NUMBER OF RESTORATION PROJECTS HAVE BEEN UNDERTAKEN TO RESTORE MANY OF THE SIGNIFICANT MURALS WHICH HAVE SINCE BEEN VANDALISED. THE GALLERY HAS BEEN PROTECTED BY THE ARTISTS AND INDIVIDUAL SPONSORS/SUPPORTERS. IT IS UNFORTUNATE THAT IT HAS BEEN BECOMING MORE AND MORE NEGLECTED AND FORGOTTEN. THE FINE LINE BETWEEN WHAT IS PUBLIC AND PRIVATE IS WHAT INTERESTS ME AND EVENTUALLY LED ME TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF MY CONCEPT FOR MY FINAL DESIGN PROPOSAL - CONVERSATION. THE EAST SIDE GALLERY SITS ON A FINE LINE BEING A PLACE THAT IS NEITHER OVERTLY CONTROLLED AND DICTATED SUCH AS A GOVERNMENT BUILDING OR IS IT TOTALLY DISREGARDED. THIS QUALITY PROVOKES CONVERSATION FROM THE PUBLIC AND THE COMMUNITY. CONVERSATION IS KEY HERE IN CREATING CULTURE AND I FEEL IS VITAL IN GENERATING A MORE INTEGRATED CITY THAT IS PARTICULARLY APPROPRIATE TO THE STUDIO’S THEME OF INCLUSION/EXCLUSION.

66


WEEK 5

I

C U LT U R E M A P

1.3KM M端hlenstrasse (Mill Street)

ESTABLISHED 1990

POSSIBLY THE LARGEST AND LONGEST-LASTING OPEN AIR GALLERY IN THE WORLD RESTORED SEVERAL TIMES - 2009 PROTECTED BY ARTISTS AND INDIVIDUAL SPONSORS

OVER 105 PAINTINGS EXPRESSES EUPHORIA AND FREEDOM

DAMAGED BY WEATHERING

67


WEEK 5

I

C U LT U R E M A P

68


WEEK 5

I

C U LT U R E M A P

69


WEEK 5

I

C U LT U R E M A P

ARCHITECTURE OF CONVERSATION - A DIAGRAM THAT MAPS CURATED VS PUBLIC ART

70


WEEK 5

I

C U LT U R E M A P

AXONOMETRIC LINE DRAWING OF STAIRS AS A POSSIBLE ARCHITECTURE FOR CONVERSATION TO OCCUR.

71


WEEK 5

I

C U LT U R E M A P

SOUTH ELEVATION - STAIRS FOR CONVERSATION

NORTH ELEVATION - STAIRS FOR CONVERSATION

72


WEEK 5

I

C U LT U R E M A P

THEATRE

CONVENTION HALL

ARTIST RESIDENCE

STAIRS AND SHAFTS

LIFTS AND SHAFTS

OPEN GALLERY

73


WEEK 5

I

C U LT U R E M A P

1.3KM M端hlenstrasse (Mill Street)

ESTABLISHED 1990

POSSIBLY THE LARGEST AND LONGEST-LASTING OPEN AIR GALLERY IN THE WORLD RESTORED SEVERAL TIMES - 2009 PROTECTED BY ARTISTS AND INDIVIDUAL SPONSORS

OVER 105 PAINTINGS EXPRESSES EUPHORIA AND FREEDOM

DAMAGED BY WEATHERING

74


HIGH ART

CONTROVERSIAL

DEGENERATE (SOCIAL)

POLICIES (GOVERNMENT)

WEATHERING (NATURE)

- HIGHLY CURATED - WELL MAINTAINED - PRIVATELY OWNED - ELISTIST - EXCLUSIVE - RARE

- CURATED - MAINTAINED - MOSTLY PRIVATELY OWNED - PAY TO VIEW - LIMITED/RARE

- SEMII PUBLIC/PRIVATE - SELDOM MAINTAINED - ACCESSIBLE - CONTROVERSIAL - COMMON - CONSTANTLY CHANGING

- PUBLIC - NO MAINTENANCE - UNRECOGNISABLE - DEGENERATE - DIRTY - UNPLEASANT

75


THEATRE

CONVENTION HALL

ARTIST RESIDENCE

STAIRS AND SHAFTS

CIRCULATION

GALLERY

AXIS OF INGRESS AND EGRESS FROM SITE TRUSS STRUCTURE STAIRS/RAMPS SKYLIGHTS FROM GALLERY BELOW MAIN ENTRY OPEN AIR GALLERY ST MATTHEW’S CHURCH

PERSPECTIVE/RENDER - PUBLIC SPACE

SITE PLAN | GROUND FLOOR

STAIRS/RAMP

UPPER FLOOR TO ACCESS MODULES

EAST ELEVATION

TO UPPER FLOORS

MODULAR WALLS SYSTEM

EXAMPLE OF GREEN WALL AND PUBLIC GARDEN SYSTEMS WEST ELEVATION

76


WEEK 5

I

C U LT U R E M A P

THE HEAVY, FLOATING OBJECT 1ST FLOOR GROUND FLOOR

SPACE | PLACE | VOID

THE STAIRS

THE ELEVATOR SHAFT

- TO THAT OTHER PLACE - INCLUSION/EXCLUSION - TAKES YOU PLACES

- NO ACCESS FROM THE STREET - EXCLUSIVE ARCHITECTURE

SYMBOLISM | DIAGRAM

SITE CONTEXT

ADDING PROGRAM

77


WEEK 6 MID SEMESTER INTERIM

78


WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM

INCLUSION/EXCLUSION Our existential condition as human beings is constantly defined and redefined in a continuous state of flux. We Breathe. We Eat. We love. We hate. We feel. We live. We relate. We associate. We connect. We think. We do. We Exist. These are the traits that formulate the human psyche and determines our instinctive nature as well as humanistic desires. It is here and on this basis in which the conditions of inclusion and exclusion are fundamentally built upon. I use the term condition to describe inclusion and exclusion as it is to me a concept that is not deterministically bound by any specific form or idea but rather one that is subjectively constructed and constituted between the perceived and the perceiver. This middle ground. This state and sense of becoming.

REFLECTION Through the first 6 weeks of design esquisses and exercises, I explored a wide range of ideas which ranged from architectural scale, dependency and so on. However what really stuck with me and became useful were my interrogation of IDENTITY and SPACE. PLACE. VOID. 1. Identity is the way in which I explored inclusion and exclusion as a mental construct. The perspective of the perceiver and how it gives rise to whether we feel included or excluded. a. There are two conditions here – the inner identity of the self and the external environment. b. Illustrate simple parametric experiment defining the number of internal and external identities and how it gives rise to chaos. 2. Space. Place. Void. This area of exploration relates to the perceived and interrogates how the object/ architecture plays a role in formulating identities. Emphasise that I am not associating or valuing any space, place or void to have inclusive or exclusive characteristics. At this point I am merely exploring the idea as I believe that there is this duality in which architecture speaks about inclusion/exclusion. It was in week 5 when I was assigned to research the East Side Gallery that these two ideas started to come together. How? Well naturally art is a very pure form of individual expression that relates very well to identity and secondly it is manifested or created through a medium/form – usually in spaces.

79


WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM

DESIG N B R I E F

KULTURFORUM = CULTURE + FORUM PROGRAM: TO DESIGN/CREATE A PLACE WHICH GENERATES BOTH PUBLIC AND PRIVATE INTERESTS, WHICH ENCOURAGES ACTIVE CONVERSATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN CULTURE (ARTS, CRAFT, MUSIC, LITERATURE, CULLINARY). AN INCLUSIVE PROGRAM THAT SOCIALLY, ECONOMICALLY AND POLITCALLY CHALLENGES THE CONVENTIONS OF CULTURAL PRACTICES IN THE FIELD OF THE DESIGN, ARTS AND CRAFT. ONE THAT CHALLENGES CAPITAL COMMODITIZATION AND THE INSTITUTIONALISATION OF THE ARTS. ONE THAT PROMOTES AND ENDORSES THE FREEDOM OF ARTISTIC EXPRESSION AND DESIGN INNOVATIVITY. “If the argument against institutionalisation in art is not to merge with the conservative defence of art as a minority culture of permanent values threatened by the masses and dumbing down, then it must engage with the specifics of the social system that art is gripped by in the process of institutionalisation.” - Dave Beech, 2006 “I don’t think it is the function of art to be pleasing. Art is not democratic. It is not for the people.” - Richard Serra

“the arts and other manifestations of human intellectual achievement regarded collectively.” “the ideas, customs, and social behaviour of a particular people or society.” Arts, Craft, Design, Cullinary, Music, Literature.

“a meeting or medium where ideas and views on a particular issue can be exchanged.” A space for open conversation and freedom of expression. A public community.

Local and International. Past and Present.

80


CULTURAL HUB PROGRAM (UNESCO) CREATIVE CITIES NETWORK

GOVERNMENT

BERLIN

Saint-Etienne

Helsinki

Nagoya

ART

Beijing

MUSIC

Graz

Artist/Designer’s Residency

Integrated Gallery

INNOVATION STOPS

Montreal

Curitiba

CRAFT

Seoul

Shenzhen

Bibao

CULLINARY

Design/ Cultural Archive

Artist/Designer Studio

THE ARKHIVE

Buenos Aires

LITERATURE

Shanghai

GLOBAL MOBILITY

VISION & OBJECTIVES

ARTISTIC CURRENCY

CULTURAL EXCHANGE

THREAT

UTOPIA & DYSTOPIA

CHECK & BALANCE

CORPORATISATION

CAPITALIST REFORMATION FREEDOM OF ARTISTIC EXPRESSION

NETWORKING

GLOBAL EXCHANGE

ECONOMY

DEMOCRACY

INTELLECTUAL & INFORMATINAL CAPITAL

WAR

CONFLICT

COLLAPSE OF GOVERNMENT

81


V

WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM VOID SPACE PLACE PLACE

PLACE VOID

SPACE

- A continuous expanse which is free, available or unoccupied.

PLACE

SPACE

PLACE

- Place is a space that has meaning and value to someone.

- Void is a vacuum. - In between space and place.

- Dimensions of height, depth and width within which all things exist and move.

- Place is an extension of space through cultural, social, bilogical value.

- A position at a distance from which one measure from.

- A field of Humanistic Geography

- Does not have a proram or function. - The fabric in which space and place are created from.

- It is multilayered and subjective. -It is one dimensional and is only a physica location. - it is bound by time. - Suggests movement of COMING and GOING.

- Has no spcific boundary. - It is created when the physical attributes, emotional connections and psychological perceptions are combined to impact individual meaning and value.

- Ambiguous.

- It has both OBJECTIVE and SUBJECTIVE qualities.

- Possesses only OBJECTIVE qualities.

82


WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM

ELEVATION

EXPLODED ISOMETRIC

83


WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM

VECTOR LINEWORK - SPACE PLACE VOID

84


WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM

DESIGN JOURNAL

85


CO-ORDINATES

LOCATION

TIME

MOVEMENT

BOUNDARY

EMOTIONS

IDENTITY

MEMORY 86


SPACE

PLACE

VOID

PLACE

SPACE

PLACE

VOID SPACE

SPACE

CO-ORDINATES

PLACE

LOCATION

VOID

VOID

TIME

MOVEMENT

BOUNDARY

EMOTIONS

IDENTITY

MEMORY

87


WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM

ELEVATION

SECTION

SECTION

88


WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM

SECTION

FACADE

89


WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM

AXONOMETRIC

AXONOMETRIC

90


WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM

91


WEEK 6

I

MID SEMESTER INTERIM

SITE PLAN

92


ARK HIVE SECTION

CIRCULATION

SOUTH EEVATION

SITE PLAN

CRANE STRUCTURE

EAST ELEVATION

ARK HIVE GROUND FLOOR

LOWER LEVELS

CRANE STRUCTURE

EXPLODED AXONOMETRIC

AERIAL PERSPECTIVE

GROUND FLOOR PLAN

93


COMMUNITY SPACE

ARTIST STUDIO

CUSTOMISABLE MODULAR INSERTIONS

MUSICIOAN/RECORDING STUDIO

SUPER STRUCTURE

FLOOR OPENINGS COMMUNITY GARDEN MODULE

DESIGN STUDIO

SECTION - MODULE CONFIGURATION

SINGLE MODULE LITERATURE

SUPERSTRUCTURE

DESIGN STUDIO

CRANE STRUCTURE

2 GRID MODULAR EXTENSION

3 GRID MODULAR EXPANSION

MODULAR INSERTIONS

12M MOAT TO SERVICE LOWER MODULES

CRANE INSTALLS/REMOVES MODULES FACADE POPULATION - MODULES

94


ARTIST STUDIO

CEILING CAVITY FOR SERVICES

SINGLE STUDIO - POET, WRITER, JOURNALIST

SUPER STRUCTURE

CIRCULATION

MULTI DORMITORY RESIDENCE

TOILETS

PANTRY

PERFORATED CORRIDOR

95


96


WEEK 7 - 8

BERLIN 14.09.15 - 4.10.15

97


WEEK 7 - 8

I

BERLIN ANCB

DESIGN JOURNAL

98


WEEK 7 - 8

I

BERLIN ANCB

DESIGN JOURNAL

99


WEEK 7 - 8

I

BERLIN ANCB

D E SIG N BR I E F

KULTURFORUM = CULTURE + FORUM

MAIN SITE ISSUES OBSERVED 1. VEHICULAR TRAFFIC DISRUPTING SITE LEGIBILITY.

“the arts and other manifestations of human intellectual achievement regarded collectively.”

“a meeting or medium where ideas and views on a particular issue can be exchanged.”

“the ideas, customs, and social behaviour of a particular people or society.”

A space for open conversation and freedom of expression.

Arts, Craft, Design, Cullinary, Music, Literature.

A public community.

2. A LACK OF VISUAL CONNECTIVITY. 3. INCONSISTENT SITE LEVELS 4. CAR PARKING IMPEDING ON SITE PHYSICAL CONNECTIVITY

Local and International. Past and Present.

DESIGN OBJECTIVE TO GENERATE CONVERSATION 100


KEY DESIGN STRATEGIES 1. IMPROVE SITE LEGIBILITY BY REMOVING/REDUCING VEHICULAR TRAFFIC 2. INTRODUCING LANDSCAPE TO IMPROVE VISUAL CONNECTIVITY 3. SINKING POSTDAMER STRASSE 4. RELOCATING CAR PARK TO THE LOWER LEVELS OF THE BUILDING COMPLEX

PROPOSED CAR PARK ENTRANCE

D. E.

A.

B.

C.

CONNECTION TO POSTDAMER PLATZ

REROUTING TRAFFIC IN RESPONSE TO POSTDAMER STRASSE SINKING OF POSTDAMER STRASSE

LEGEND A. ANCB BLOCK B. ARTIST/DESIGN RESIDENCE C. CAFE (F&B) D. STUDIOS E. GALLERY

PROPOSED DESIGN - ANCB METROPOLITAN DESIGN LAB - ART GALLERY - BLACK BOX THEATRE - DESIGN/ARTIST RESIDENCE

101


WEEK 7 - 8

I

BERLIN ANCB

MODES OF GENERATING CONVERSATION -

CROSS SITE LINKAGE BETWEEN F&B

CROSS SITE LINKAGE BETWEEN RESIDENCE AND DESIGN STUDIOS

VOID OF CONVERSATION AS THE CENTRAL CIRCULATION BETWEEN ALL PROGRAMS

PROGRAM | CIRCULATION | RELATIONSHIP F&B GALLERY

CORRIDORS OF CONVERSATION

FULL PROGRAM & CIRCULATION

ARTIST/DESIGN RESIDENCES

BLACK BOX THEATRE

SPACES OF CONVERSATION -

VOID OF CONVERSTAION OPEN AMPHITEATRE

CORRIDOR OF CONVERSATION

RESIDENCE AND COURTYARD

ROOFTOP LANDSCAPE

102


LEGEND 1. VOID OF CONVERSATION 2. BLACKBOX THEATRE 3. F&B OPEN AREA 4. RESIDENCE BLOCK 5. ANCB BLOCK 6. OPEN AMPHITEATRE 7. STUDIO COURTYARDS 8. ST. MATTHEW FORECOURT

7.

PEDESTRIAN AND CYCLIST ROUTE

1.

8.

3.

2.

6.

5.

SITE PLAN - 1:1000

4.

CONNECTION TO NEW NATIONALE GALLERY

103


WEEK 7 - 8

I

BERLIN ANCB

DESIGN JOURNAL

104


WEEK 7 - 8

I

BERLIN ANCB

DESIGN JOURNAL

105


106


WEEK 9 -10 K U LT U R F O R U M A SITE FOR CONVERSATION BERLIN FINAL CRIT 02.10.15

107


7.

1.

6. 5. 2.

3.

4.

KULTURFORUM BUILDINGS 1. BERLIN PHILHARMONIE 2. BERLIN STATE LIBRARY 3. NEUE NATIONALE GALERIE 4. WISSENSCHAFTSZENTRUM

5. KUNSTBIBLIOTHEK 6. GEMALDEGALERIE 7. KUNSTGEWERBEMUSEUM 8 ST MATTHEW’S CHURCH

FRAGMENTED SITE

SITES OF CONCERN

- VEHICULAR AND TRAFFIC OBSTRUCTIONS - SITE LEVEL INCONSISTENCIES - VISUAL OBSTRUCTIONS

- OPEN CAR PARKS DISRUPT THE SITE’S LEGIBILITY - FRONT OF STATE LIBRRAY IN BAD CONDITION - OVERALL NON COHESIVE

NEW PLANNING PROPOSITION

A SINGLE LANDMASS

A LEVELED SITE

1. SINK POSTDAMER STRASSE 2. REROUTE TRAFFIC ROUTES 3. ELIMINATE VEHICULAR ACCESS TO SITE

- PHYSICALLY CONENCTED SITE - PEDESTRIAN AND CYCLIST ACCESS ONLY

- LEVEL INCONSISTENCIES RESOLVED - PUBLIC SPACE AND COURTYARD CREATED - COHERENT AND LEGIBLE SITE

108


THE COURTYARD

CROSS-SITE LINKAGE

A.

A.

A.

B.

B. E.

1. CROSS-SITE LINKAGE AND MOVEMENT

2. AN INCLUSIVE SPACE

F.

B.

D.

THE LANDSCAPE

4. A BUILDING TYPOLOGY FOR CONVERSATION

5. PERMITTANCE OF NATURAL LIGHT

6. PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SPACES

D.

E. C.

3. FLEXIBLE PROGRAMMING

E. C.

D.

A. BERLIN PHILHARMONIE B. STATE LIBRARY C. NEUE NATIONALEGALERIE D. ST MATTHEW’S E. GEMALDEGALERIE

A. TIER GARDEN B. POSTDAMER PLATZ C. SPREE RIVER D. NEUE NATIONALEGALERIE E. WISSENSCHAFTSZENTRUM

A. STUDIO B. CAFE C. PUBLIC THEATRE D. GALLERY E. BLACK BOX THEATRE F. ANCB

1. LINKING THE EXISTING KULTURFORUM BUILDINGS. TWO MAJOR AXES GENERATED FROM GREATEST SPANNING DISTANCES.

2. DETERMINANT AXES VIA TRAFFIC ANALYSIS AND OBSERVATIONS

3. DESIGN PROGRAMMING LOGIC AND RESULTANT AXES OF CONVERSATION.

OPENESS PHYSICAL CONNECTION HAN SCHAROUN PLAN (LANDSCAPE) VISUAL CONNECTIVITY

109


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

LANDSCAPE PROPOSAL - MASTER PLAN 110


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

OPENESS PHYSICAL CONNECTION HANS SCHAURON PLAN (LANDSCAPE) VISUAL CONNECTIVITY

THE LANDSCAPE STRATEGY 111


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

112


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

113


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

SITE PLAN - DESIGN PROPOSAL 114


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

LEGEND 1. VOID 2. STUDIO COURTYARD 3. CAFE 4. RESIDENCES 5. OPEN THEATRE 6. OPEN GALLERY 7. GALLERY CAFE 8. CORRIDOR

2. 3.

8. 7.

1.

6.

4. 5.

FIRST FLOOR PLAN | 1:500

115


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

LEGEND 1. VOID 2. GALLERY 3. GALLERY CAFE 4. BLACK BOX THEATRE 5. BLACK BOX LOBBY 6. OPEN GALLERY 7. ANCB LOBBY 8. CAFE 9. RESIDENCES

8.

7.

1. 7.

6.

4.

5.

2. 7. 9.

GROUND FLOOR PLAN | 1:500

116


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

LEGEND 1. VOID 2. GALLERY 3. GALLERY SHOP 4. BLACK BOX THEATRE 5. BACK OF HOUSE 6. STUDIO 7. CORRIDOR

6.

3.

1.

7.

4.

5.

2.

BASEMENT PLAN | 1:500

117


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

LONG SECTION

BERLIN ANCB

118


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

SHORT SECTION

BERLIN ANCB

119


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

AXONOMETRIC DIAGRAM - PROGRAM

120


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

AXONOMETRIC DIAGRAM - DESIGN STRATEGY

121


W E E K 9 - 1 0 I

BERLIN ANCB

122


PERSPECTIVE - VOID

123


PERSPECTIVE - CORRIDOR

124


WEEK 11 - 14 MSD FINAL PRESENTATION 06.11.15

125


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

126


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

BERLIN’S ACTIVE CORRIDORS

BERLIN AS AN ARCHIPELAGO

BERLIN’S TENEMENT TYPOLOGY

BERLIN AS A LANDSCAPE 127


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

BERLIN URBAN SITE ANALYSIS 128


7.

1.

6. 5. 2.

3.

4.

KULTURFORUM BUILDINGS -

FRAGMENTED SITE

SITES OF CONCERN

- VEHICULAR AND TRAFFIC OBSTRUCTIONS - SITE LEVEL INCONSISTENCIES - VISUAL OBSTRUCTIONS

- OPEN CAR PARKS DISRUPT THE SITE’S LEGIBILITY - FRONT OF STATE LIBRRAY IN BAD CONDITION - OVERALL NON COHESIVE

NEW PLANNING PROPOSITION

A SINGLE LANDMASS

A LEVELED SITE

1. SINK POSTDAMER STRASSE 2. REROUTE TRAFFIC ROUTES 3. ELIMINATE VEHICULAR ACCESS TO SITE

- PHYSICALLY CONENCTED SITE - PEDESTRIAN AND CYCLIST ACCESS ONLY

- LEVEL INCONSISTENCIES RESOLVED - PUBLIC SPACE AND COURTYARD CREATED - COHERENT AND LEGIBLE SITE

1. BERLIN PHILHARMONIE 2. BERLIN STATE LIBRARY 3. NEUE NATIONALE GALERIE 4. WISSENSCHAFTSZENTRUM

5. KUNSTBIBLIOTHEK 6. GEMALDEGALERIE 7. KUNSTGEWERBEMUSEUM 8 ST MATTHEW’S CHURCH

129


THE COURTYARD

CROSS-SITE LINKAGE

A.

A.

A.

B.

B. E.

1. CROSS-SITE LINKAGE AND MOVEMENT

2. AN INCLUSIVE SPACE

F.

B.

D.

THE LANDSCAPE

4. A BUILDING TYPOLOGY FOR CONVERSATION

5. PERMITTANCE OF NATURAL LIGHT

6. PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SPACES

D.

E. C.

3. FLEXIBLE PROGRAMMING

E. C.

D.

A. BERLIN PHILHARMONIE B. STATE LIBRARY C. NEUE NATIONALEGALERIE D. ST MATTHEW’S E. GEMALDEGALERIE

A. TIER GARDEN B. POSTDAMER PLATZ C. SPREE RIVER D. NEUE NATIONALEGALERIE E. WISSENSCHAFTSZENTRUM

A. STUDIO B. CAFE C. PUBLIC THEATRE D. GALLERY E. BLACK BOX THEATRE F. ANCB

1. LINKING THE EXISTING KULTURFORUM BUILDINGS. TWO MAJOR AXES GENERATED FROM GREATEST SPANNING DISTANCES.

2. DETERMINANT AXES VIA TRAFFIC ANALYSIS AND OBSERVATIONS

3. DESIGN PROGRAMMING LOGIC AND RESULTANT AXES OF CONVERSATION.

OPENESS PHYSICAL CONNECTION HAN SCHAROUN PLAN (LANDSCAPE) VISUAL CONNECTIVITY

130


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

DESIGN STRATEGY - CORRIDORS

DESIGN STRATEGY - BUILDING INTERFACE

DESIGN STRATEGY - LANDSCAPE

DESIGN STRATEGY - RESPONDING TO THE CONTEXT 131


132


EXPLODED AXONOMETRIC

133


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

SITE PLAN LINEWORK 134


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

SITE PLAN 135


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

EXPLODED ISOMETRIC - PROGRAM 136


137


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

SHORT SECTION

LONG SECTION 138


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

139


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

140


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

141


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

FLOOR PLANS - LINEWORK 142


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

143


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

SECTIONAL PERSPECTIVE - LINEWORK

144


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

145


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

PERSPECTIVE - FROM STATE LIBRARY

146


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

PERSPECTIVE - ST MATTHEW’S FORECOURT

147


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

PERSPECTIVE - BLACK BOX THEATRE (VIEWING GALLERY)

148


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

PERSPECTIVE - VOID OF CONVERSATION

149


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

PERSPECTIVE - BLACK BOX THEATRE (IN SESSION)

150


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

PERSPECTIVE - CORRIDOR OF CONVERSATION

151


WEEK 11 - 14

I

M S D P R E S E N TAT I O N

PERSPECTIVE -ANCB OBSERVATION FLOOR

152


DESIGN JOURNAL CONCLUSION

T O M M Y H E N G 5 1 6 6 7 3

153


154


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.